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Insights into Chemo-Mechanical Yielding and Eigenstrains in Lithium-Ion Battery Degradation

Abstract:
In lithium-ion battery electrodes, repeated lithium insertion and extraction generate compositional gradients and volumetric changes that produce evolving stress fields and eigenstrains, accelerating mechanical degradation. While existing diffusion-induced stress models often capture only elastic behavior, they rarely provide a closed-form analytical treatment of irreversible deformation or its connection to cyclic degradation. In this work, a transparent analytical framework is developed for a planar electrode that explicitly couples lithium diffusion with elastic-plastic deformation, eigenstrain formation, and fracture-aware stress relaxation. The framework provides a means to quantitatively model the evolution of residual stress gradients, revealing the formation of a damaging tensile state at the electrode surface after delithiation and demonstrating how path-dependent irreversible deformation establishes a degradation memory. A parametric study is used to demonstrate the framework’s capability to clarify the influence of diffusivity and yield strength on residual stress development. This framework, which unifies diffusion, plasticity, and fracture in closed-form mechanical relations, provides new physical insight into the origins of chemo-mechanical degradation and offers a computationally efficient tool for guiding the design of durable next-generation electrode materials where chemo-mechanical strains are moderate.
Publication status:
Published
Peer review status:
Peer reviewed

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Publisher copy:
10.3390/batteries11120465

Authors

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Institution:
University of Oxford
Division:
MPLS
Department:
Engineering Science
Sub department:
Engineering Science
Role:
Author
ORCID:
0000-0002-6637-6479


Publisher:
MDPI
Journal:
Batteries More from this journal
Volume:
11
Issue:
12
Pages:
465
Article number:
465
Publication date:
2025-12-18
Acceptance date:
2025-12-14
DOI:
EISSN:
2313-0105
ISSN:
2313-0105


Language:
English
Keywords:
Pubs id:
2355672
UUID:
uuid_64b28963-6f1f-47b4-92df-9846360b143f
Local pid:
pubs:2355672
Source identifiers:
3642768
Deposit date:
2026-01-08
ARK identifier:
This ORA record was generated from metadata provided by an external service. It has not been edited by the ORA Team.

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